TroyMcClure
Technical User
Ok...I'm at the console of a server and we have a corrupted .mdb file. I can't open it to repair it because it claims someone has it open. Nobody does, this is a fact. I go into the .ldb file and it won't let me delete that bcause of similar 'sharing' violation.
Now, I'm the admin of the machine, I don't care how many 'alleged' users of this file it messes up--I want to delete the damn file. How do I get around the NT locks, etc, and delete this file? This goes for any file, actually, but the current one happens to be an .mdb file. It just seems that, even though it can be dangerous, NT should have an 'emergency' method of deleting a file regardless of whether 100 people are using it or none. Is it possible?
--T
Now, I'm the admin of the machine, I don't care how many 'alleged' users of this file it messes up--I want to delete the damn file. How do I get around the NT locks, etc, and delete this file? This goes for any file, actually, but the current one happens to be an .mdb file. It just seems that, even though it can be dangerous, NT should have an 'emergency' method of deleting a file regardless of whether 100 people are using it or none. Is it possible?
--T